*** EU's top team in India to bolster relations | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

EU's top team in India to bolster relations

AFP | New Delhi

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The EU's top team arrived in India on an "unprecedented" visit Thursday, aiming to broaden commercial and diplomatic ties and hedge against souring relations with the United States.

EU chief Ursula von der Leyen and her college of commissioners are to hold talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government in New Delhi during the two-day trip.

"In this era of conflicts and intense competition, you need trusted friends," Von der Leyen posted on X after landing in New Delhi.

"For Europe, India is such a friend and a strategic ally. I will discuss with Narendra Modi how to take our strategic partnership to the next level," she added.

The delegation is expected to focus on higher trade with the world's most populous country, lower tariffs to enter its rapidly expanding market, and resilient supply chains with an eye on the Asia-Pacific and China's growing regional profile.

Von der Leyen began her trip by paying her respects to the revered Indian independence hero Mahatma Gandhi at New Delhi's Raj Ghat memorial before meeting with the foreign minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.

She is scheduled to meet Modi on Friday to discuss topics ranging from artificial intelligence to energy.

"We aim to advance discussions on a free trade agreement, expand cooperation on digital technologies, particularly AI, and accelerate our work on clean technologies like electric vehicles and green hydrogen," she said in a Times of India interview.

Almost all of the EU's 26 commissioners are joining von der Leyen in what the EU chief is billing as the first visit of its kind to the South Asian giant -- and the first outside Europe for the new college that took office in December.

Brussels has been working to broaden its horizons since US President Donald Trump won back the White House in November and undercut European allies by launching Ukraine talks with Russia's Vladimir Putin.

India has long pursued a policy of strategic autonomy in foreign affairs.

Historically close to Russia, its traditional supplier of military hardware, it has resisted Western pressure to distance itself from Moscow following its invasion of Ukraine. The visit "will send the message that Europe is shoring up other partners, including India, as much as they focus on the task of resetting EU-India ties", The Hindu newspaper reported.